Intro
So, when you woke up this morning, did you arise as royalty?  Whether you felt 
like you were or not, Scripture says you are.  “You are a chosen people, a 
royal priesthood, a holy nation, God’s special possession” (1 Peter 2:9).  You 
are royalty.  You will reign with God in eternity after Christ returns on the 
Last Day, completing the salvation He earned for you (Revelation 22:5).  

Main Body
Now, if that told the entire story, you would leap out of bed as the royalty 
you are.  But more is part of your life than your royal status.  For you came 
into this world saddled with sin and its corruption.  So, you sin, experience 
sadness and pain, and get sick.  Death will one day come to your door and 
refuse to leave.  All these enemies enter your life and can rob you of your joy.

By faith, you understand you are a forgiven, redeemed child of God, even when 
your gut tells you otherwise.  Here’s the truth: our feelings are up and down.  
So, the Psalm for today fits our real lives as God’s people living with fallen 
flesh in a fallen world.  

David, in the center of the psalm, declared: “I lie down and sleep; I wake 
again because the Lord protects me” (Psalm 3:5).  He wrote this psalm when he 
was fleeing for his life, enemies close to his tail.  Even worse, his son was 
leading the charge to capture his Dad, and King of Israel.  How’s that for 
showing love to your dad on this, our Father’s Day?

Enemies are also on the prowl against us.  Sometimes, those enemies attack at 
night, as they do during the day.  Sometimes, those enemies are even more 
fierce in the enveloping darkness of night.  During those sieges and battles, 
the Lord protects and keeps you.  We arise in the morning light, able to voice 
a prayer on our lips and sing a song in our heart—renewed and ready to face the 
day.

Even as those brought into God’s royal priesthood, “our struggle is not against 
flesh-and-blood enemies, but against the rulers, the authorities, the forces of 
cosmic darkness, and the spiritual powers of evil in the heavens” (Ephesians 
6:12).  David reminds us—not only of our many foes—but that they are active in 
opposing us, even mocking us.  “How stupid to look to God for help!” they scorn.

So, when you wake up each day, make the sign of the cross and repeat the words 
of your baptism: “In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit” 
(Matthew 29:19).  Remember your baptism.  For when you recall your baptism, the 
Spirit reminds you to put on God’s baptismal armor, which is yours in baptism.  

Far too often, that is what we don’t do.  We don’t put on the armor God has for 
us.  We, instead, arise wearing our self-made protection.  We become self-help 
royalty, thinking we can fight off the enemies on our own (if it even pops into 
our mind).  In our foolishness, we presume we can overcome the devil’s 
temptations and defend against the arrows of our spiritual enemies.  We can 
overcome, on our own, the accusations of our sins, which cause us guilt, 
sorrow, and despair.  

Trying to defend ourselves against our spiritual enemies is like, as the 
expression goes, wanting to pull yourself up by your bootstraps.  We can’t do 
that.  Why?  Such self-help originates from within yourself as the source as 
what you want to achieve.  Now, if you could do that on your own, why do you 
need Jesus?  

Fighting such spiritual battles, based on what you have in yourself, is 
fruitless, fraught with disaster.  Such self-reliance in matters eternal stems 
from an idolatry of self.  You take your focus off Christ and place in on 
yourself.  You look to yourself as the source, the power, to bring about your 
spiritual reality.  

Jesus then becomes less and less necessary.  One day, you find yourself 
trusting in your abilities, making them into your own self-made God.  You now 
sit on the throne, toppling Jesus with a Pharisee-like reliance on self.

Joy beyond all joy!  Salvation belongs to, comes from, the Lord, not us.  “You, 
O Lord, are a shield around me, my glory, and the One, who lifts my head.  I 
cry aloud to the Lord, and he answers me from his holy mountain” (Psalm 3:3-4). 
 Salvation comes from the Lord—not you or me!  Now we have hope, for if 
salvation depended on us, we would only mess it up.

The Lord places Himself between our enemies and us.  He is our spiritual 
shield.  The Psalms repeat this truth over and again, in many places.  “The 
Lord is… my shield, the glory of my salvation” (Psalm 18:2).  “The Lord is my 
strength and my shield; my heart trusts in Him, and I am helped” (Psalm 28:7).  
“O Israel, trust in the Lord!  He is their help and shield” (Psalm 115:9).  
Those are only a few.  

The Psalms proclaim many times over about God being our protector and shield, 
who defends us and gives us the victory.  Because the Lord is a shield around 
us, we can sleep and wake in peace, unafraid of the many myriads around us, 
hell-bent on destroying us.  The Apostle Paul reflected such a reality in his 
letter to Rome.   

I am convinced that nothing: not death or life, angels or rulers, the present 
or the future, or any powers, height, or depth, or anything else in creation 
can separate us from God’s love in Christ Jesus, our Lord. [Romans 8:38-39]

You may think this is abstract, but not so.  God brought you into His Church 
through baptism (in the Old Covenant, God used circumcision).  Just as baptism 
wasn’t what you did but what God did for you, so also with God being your 
shield and salvation.  That’s who God is and what He does.  Faith trusts this 
reality.  Faith does not create it or bring it into being.   

Trusting in God as your eternal shield changes your everyday life.  You then 
receive God’s rest and refreshment for you as a gift from Him.  You aren’t 
forced to do what you are powerless to do: God is your shield and salvation.  
Faith trusts who God is and what He does.  

If you ask someone whether the statement, “God helps those who help themselves” 
is in the Bible, many will answer, “Of course.”  But those words are not in 
Scripture.  They came to us from Ben Franklin and, from there, entered our 
American, religious thinking.  In matters spiritual, that saying teaches us to 
rely on ourselves instead of God.  We learn an idolatry of self, making God the 
responder to what we first do.

“Salvation belongs to the Lord.”  Salvation comes from the Lord.  God helps 
those who cannot help themselves.  He is our salvation and shield.  We even see 
Jesus in this psalm, as we remember the King, who wore a crown of thorns, who 
fulfilled the words of this psalm and became our salvation for us.  

Our mighty shield is the crucified and risen One whom we remember as we pray 
the words of the psalm: “I lie down and sleep; I wake again because the Lord 
protects me.”  Jesus Christ, the King of creation, laid down His life in death. 
 He woke again and rose from the tomb to protect us from every spiritual enemy 
in the highest heights or the deepest depths.  Baptized into His death and 
resurrection, no earthly or otherworldly enemy can destroy you.  You are 
redeemed and saved by the blood of the Lamb.

So, take up the armor of God, not your armor, but God’s armor for you.  Only 
with God’s armor, only with what He gives you, can you “stand firm.”

So stand with the belt of truth around your waist, with righteousness as armor 
around your chest, your feet fitted in the gospel of peace.  Even more, take up 
the shield of faith, with which you can quench the flaming arrows of the evil 
one.  Put on the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the 
Word of God. [Ephesians 6:13-18]

Psalm 3 teaches us about prayer: it’s for those who need help.  Prayer is the 
voice of people who are powerless on their own and realize it.  But prayer is, 
even more, giving voice and showing in whom someone trusts, whether God will 
untangle him from something as he would like or not.  

We pray when trouble comes our way and, because of sin in our lives, it is ever 
present.  So, we never outgrow prayer.  To pray is to confess: God doesn’t help 
those who help themselves.  No, God helps those who cannot help themselves.

After Jesus returns on the Last Day and calls forth the new heaven and earth, 
reality will change for the people of God.  Revelation 22:5 reads, “There will 
never be night again.  [The saints] will need no light of a lamp or even the 
sun because the Lord God will shine on them—and they will reign forever and 
ever.”  Such a future awaits you—and is even now yours, awaiting its 
fulfillment in Christ.  Jesus makes you a king or a queen because He is King.  

Jesus, the King, the One, who wore the crown of thorns, redeemed you.  His 
blood is your shield.  You cry to the Lord, and He answers from His holy 
mountain.  You lay down to sleep, and the Lord protects you against your 
enemies.  You need not be afraid in the face of any enemy, for Your protector 
is the Lord, who crushes evil.  You know how the story ends—and it is a 
glorious one.

Conclusion
You will live happily ever after!  But this is no fairy tale, but an eternal 
reality.  In Christ Jesus, you are royalty.  In Christ Jesus, you will reign 
with Him after He calls your body forth from death, to rise to new life as He 
did.  You are a king in the kingdom of God, a queen in the courts of the Lord.  
Salvation belongs to the Lord.  Thank God that it does!  For He gives His 
salvation to you.  Amen.
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